Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : ALL USERS
From : DARYL STOUT
Date : Thu Nov 26 2015 12:09 am

TODAY  Version 3.7   06/24/94       Copyright 1986, 1994  By Patrick Kincaid

Today is Thursday  November 26, 2015.
This is the 330th day of the year, there are 35 days left.

On this day...
   Weather data after 1990 is PARTIAL. For more current
   weather history, go to the National Climate Data Center
   website at www.ncdc.noaa.gov
   In 1888 A late season hurricane brushed the East Coast with heavy
           rain and gale force winds.  The hurricane passed inside
           Nantucket and over Cape Cod, then crossed Nova Scotia.
   In 1896 Snow and high winds hit the Northern Plains and Upper
           Mississippi Valley, with a Thanksgiving Day blizzard
           across North Dakota.  The storm was followed by a severe
           cold wave in the Upper Midwest.  The temperature at
           Pokegama Dam MI plunged to 45 degrees below zero.
   In 1983 The "Great Thanksgiving Weekend Blizzard" in CO was so
           great, visibility at Limon was down to zero for 24 hours.
   In 1987 A Thanksgiving Day storm in the northeastern U.S.
           produced heavy snow in northern New England and upstate
           New York.  Snowfall totals in Maine ranged up to twenty
           inches at Flagstaff Lake.  Totals in New Hampshire ranged
           up to 18 inches at Errol.  Gales lashed the coast of
           Maine and New Hampshire.  A second storm, over the
           Southern and Central Rockies, produced nine inches of
           snow at Kanosh UT, and 13 inches at Divide CO, with five
           inches reported at Denver CO.
   In 1988 Thunderstorms produced severe weather over the Central
           Gulf Coast States during the late morning and afternoon
           hours.  Five tornadoes were reported in Mississippi, with
           the tornadoes causing a million dollars damage at
           Ruleville, and in Warren County.  In Utah, the town of
           Alta was blanketed with 15 inches of snow overnight, and
           during the day was buried under another 16.5 inches of
           snow.
   In 1989 A massive storm over the western U.S. produced heavy snow
           in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana.  The
           storm produced more than two feet of snow in the higher
           elevations of northern and central Utah, bringing more
           than sixty inches of snow to the Alta Ski Resort in the
           Wasatch Mountains.  Winds in Utah gusted to 60 mph at
           Bullfrog.  The storm brought much needed snow to the ski
           resorts of Colorado, with 19 inches reported at Beaver
           Creek.
   In 2001 For the second time in less than a week, Arkansas and
           surrounding states were ravaged by severe thunderstorms
           and tornadoes...with more damage, injuries, and fatalities.
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